HomeMy WebLinkAbout2007-0277.Ritchie.08-04-18 Decision
Commission de
Crown Employees
Grievance Settlement
règlement des griefs
Board
des employés de la
Couronne
Suite 600 Bureau 600
180 Dundas St. West 180, rue Dundas Ouest
Toronto, Ontario M5G 1Z8 Toronto (Ontario) M5G 1Z8
Tel. (416) 326-1388 Tél. : (416) 326-1388
Fax (416) 326-1396 Téléc. : (416) 326-1396
GSB# 2007-0277
UNION# 2007-0551-0003
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
THE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
BETWEEN
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(Ritchie)
Union
- and -
The Crown in Right of Ontario
(Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services)
Employer
BEFOREVice-Chair
Daniel Harris
FOR THE UNION Kirsten Agrell
Grievance Officer
Ontario Public Service Employees Union
FOR THE EMPLOYER Ryan Conacher
Counsel
Ministry of Government and Consumer
Services
HEARING
April 14, 2008.
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Decision
The Proceedings
In this grievance, OPSEU claims that Dawn Ritchie, a Probation and Parole Officer, is entitled to
mileage, meal and travel time expenses, while she was backfilling a temporary vacancy in the
Burlington Probation and Parole Office from June 2004 to December 11, 2006. By a previous
decision, her claim was limited to the fiscal year 2006 ? 2007 on the basis of timeliness of filing
the grievance.
The Facts
There is no material dispute on the facts, and I find them to be as follows. Ms. Ritchie became a
classified Probation and Parole Officer (hereafter, PO) on April 8, 2004. Her home position was
at the Parkdale Probation and Parole Office. She took up a temporary assignment at the Toronto
Youth Assessment Centre (hereafter TYAC), which operated at a location away from the
Parkdale Office. Nonetheless, she was required to attend monthly meetings at the Parkdale
Office. During this time she became estranged from her husband, Ted Kift, who was also a PO
working out of the Parkdale Office. She found it uncomfortable to be present in the Parkdale
Office for that reason. It is common ground that their interactions did not create circumstances
that ought to have engaged the grievance or WDHP processes. However, when her position at
TYAC came to an end in June 2004, she expressed to her supervisor, Donna Sverdrup, her
concerns about returning to the Parkdale Office and asked if she might be able to go to a
different office. She had very low seniority and little prospect of a lateral transfer. Ms. Sverdrup
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made enquiries and advised Ms. Ritchie that there was a temporary PO assignment in Burlington.
Ms. Ritchie accepted that assignment, which was to backfill a vacancy which existed because the
incumbent was backfilling a position elsewhere. As is often the case, at the end of the six-month
temporary vacancy, the situation remained the same and Ms. Ritchie was periodically renewed in
Burlington until the position was permanently filled on December 11, 2006.
During her time in Burlington from June 2004 to December 11, 2006, Ms. Ritchie made a
number of requests for lateral transfers in order to work closer to home. She lived near the
Mississauga Office, which is located close to Hurontario Street and The Queen Elizabeth Way.
Her distance from home to the Burlington Office was approximately 37 km. Her trip to the
Parkdale Office had been approximately 18 km.
In addition to the lateral transfer requests, on May 27, 2005, Ms. Ritchie also made a formal
?Request for Accommodation for Personal Family Circumstances/Child Care Accommodation?.
That request was made after she declined a union-approved lateral transfer to the Jane Street
Office on March 29, 2005. The distance from her home to that office was approximately 21 km.
No issue of failure to accommodate arises in this case. Seemingly, when the Burlington position
became vacant the Union was asked if it would waive the seniority preference given on lateral
transfers in order to accommodate Ms. Ritchie. The Union declined and the position went to
Gord Longhi. He appeared at the hearing before me as a representative of the Union.
Ms. Ritchie moved to a permanent position at the Mississauga Office on December 11, 2006
when Mr. Longhi took over the Burlington position. Her successful move to Mississauga was
most circuitous. Seemingly, her estranged husband obtained the position as a lateral transfer
from the Parkdale Office. She and he then agreed to swap jobs. He took her home position at
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Parkdale and she took his lateral transfer to Mississauga. That is how Ms. Ritchie ended up at
the Mississauga Office as of December 11, 2006.
On February 8, 2007, she filed a grievance claiming mileage, meal expenses and travel time for
the period of time she spent in Burlington.
The Submissions of the Parties and Reasons for Decision
Union counsel made careful, complete and structured submissions to the effect that Ms. Ritchie
may have wanted to go to an office other than Parkdale; however, the Employer selected
Burlington, and it must bear the consequences of that choice, which requires the payment to Ms.
Ritchie of the expenses claimed.
I prefer the submissions made on behalf of the Employer. Article 13 of the Collective
Agreement governs reimbursement for mileage. The salient portion is:
13.1 If an employee is required to use his or her own automobile on the Employer?s
business the following rates shall be paid?
First, on any interpretation of these facts, the employer did not require her to use her automobile
to commute to the Burlington Office any more than for her commute to Parkdale or TYAC. The
Union?s submission was that the requirement came about because of the Employer having posted
her temporarily to the Burlington Office. It is not the characterization of the posting as
temporary or permanent that triggers entitlement, it is that the Employer requires the use of the
automobile on its business. The Employer did not require her to take the Burlington position.
She was not traveling as a consequence of a decision taken by the Employer for business
reasons. She asked not to return to Parkdale for personal reasons that did not amount to formal
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accommodation. She was offered Burlington on a temporary basis and she accepted that
position. Had she been in Burlington as part of a formal accommodation, her contribution, and
that of the Union, might well have been to forego entitlement to the expenses.
Article 14 of the Collective Agreement deals with time credits while traveling. The salient
portion is:
14.1.1 Employee shall be credited with all time spent in traveling outside of working
hours when authorized by the ministry.
Ms. Ritchie?s travel time was her commuting time to and from her job. The Employer was not
asked to, and it did not, authorize this travel. Nor can authorization be inferred. These
circumstances do not engage this article. There was no business purpose in this travel other than
that of every other employee going to and returning from their workplace.
Meal allowances in this matter are governed by the Correctional Bargaining Unit Collective
Agreement at article COR 12.2.2:
COR 12.2.2 If during a normal meal period the employee is traveling on government
business other than:
(a) on patrol duties ?, or
(b) within twenty-four (24) kilometers of his or her assigned headquarters, or
(c) within the metropolitan area in which he or she is normally working;
Ms. Ritchie was traveling to and from work at the beginning and end of her shift. Her normal
breakfast and dinner meal periods would be before and after she traveled to and from work,
respectively. For those meals Ms. Ritchie was not traveling during a normal meal period and she
was not traveling on government business. During the lunch meal period she was within the
municipality where she normally worked, so was exempted by subsection (c).
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The Decision
The grievance is dismissed, despite the able arguments advanced by the Union. The fact is that
Ms. Ritchie chose to go to Burlington. The Employer did not require her posting there.
th
Dated at Toronto, this 18 day of April, 2008.
Daniel Harris, Vice Chair